Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Sep 1887, p. 2

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.lo.`\El'yBlll8 CIT Iilli CI Canton F-lnnneh from 7 A. ll\l \l'L:A.. 11.... F. X. GUUSINEAU & GU. Ladies desiring to buy New Stylish and Desirable Dress Goods should not decide until they have looked ,through our Magnicent Display. ' Every Line actually 20 per cent. lower in price than any former season. ALEXANDER R0 ssr. NEW FALL DRESS FABRICS New Shades in Colored Silk Plnshcs. 70, 75, Nk. Black and Colored Velveteen: 20, 25, 30, 40c. Blnck and Colored Dress Silks 3). 60, 75c. Extra value. 250 Pieces New Melton Dress Goods At 8, 10. l2c. 150 Pieces Job Line New Fall Dress Good: st l2c. worth 20. New Jncket and Ulster Materiuls from 25 to 50 I yard cheaper than last Full, at THE M087/1TT/M07/VE. THE MOST ST) /./SH. THE MOST I/.4/?/E0. THE BEST SELECTED. By every Lady Visitor to our Establishment that no ' are now showing . Some of the C holcen (Goods still left to select from. I have your order in lawn And nm A Ru-anin BIBBY &_V1R_T..UE% C`- ROBINSON. Are showing Immense Piles of N ew and Fashionable Fall Dry Goods. AUKNUWLEDGED ($94 call earnestly solicited. `VV'.A_L DBON S- In ordorto nuke mom for Fall Purchases. And the Lowest Priced Stock of Ever shown in Kingston. --AT- 'W'A.LDROIN"S- * iw Boomu) SHOE STORE. OPPOSITE THE WINDSOR HOTEL ALEX. ;aoss_ . \ ' 110 PRIME88 STREET. w_M._ R(__)__Bll}{SON, ICE CREAM SODA WATER. FRUITS, and CONFECTIONERY and CIGARS, All the very but and cheapest. _,-__..-_..-, V . . . - . . l\l' no-\-, nu-new vu- customers can depend on n ling I Luge And More Complete Stock in theee linee than we Inve ever before shown. at all vu-leuel : Also Trunks. Vulaeo. Re. I intend making Custom Work Iupecinlt hnvinn secured the aorvicuot the but war Murray & Taylor, This season. -site} our improvements are completed, we will hue large and elegant Show Room: for CLOAKS. CLOAKING, SHAWLS, CARPETS, ETC, where our A_ .I__,_I ,_ n_\,, ,_. _4____. ':'4.5'o".""' ' " Ladies Jackets for 35. 50, 86. 1 Jersey Cloths at Lowest Prices. 1 A/so 750 Pieces Jacket and` Ulster 0/at/rs in the Most Fashionable Materials. In Ladies Jackets for 33, 84. Q1 I'll THOMAS CUNNINGHAM, Directly opposite Pu-khill`: Old Stand. Chi/dren s Jackets fa; Three Dollars. Q Wt. invite inspection of ` nu.)- Children's Jackets for 87.50, 32. 00, 82.50. IMPROVEMENTS. We have jut received I Luge Stock o! Lndlu` Short Jacket: In the brunt Styles and Mchrinlu. We not special attention In the lolloving prices : 178 uullno an kinds. and can- aoliltl I {ti use I M .1:.``.'. ...r .a..`:.` ."'. ."' ..`.':.....e"".`..` .: o.~rI.!lxcAw. R0 AL .l(- $Jtl 0WDIR 00. 3 all Suoot. how Two Doors Below Polson's. IMPORTED JACKET?! , !:a:dv:are: `Pa-in;s: wbils , ju-cjuv ikbsolutely P-u;e_. A NEv$'"BUsmEss._ GERMAN MANUFACTURE lll`.l.H.MoOres.oftheHudaonBc `co. WootLynn It ltobei. : I `urea mom Cntsrroia (31-nu. numttr-y8o!ye::a. and Qng I220 9 an Ipochuata. umodl don cu. ux. WITH 0 Ynnr An- ' PRINCESS STREET. Roliublo Brnndl. the above - St Louis, Va-blunt`; and New Orleans Anchor III) yruns, IIIII IIII Ulsu uulucu uwr u uung Individual. The proccdeht oahblidned by the I limb being tolpowed in naming both after to-ms. cities or up than which u-y ddn their business.-Hunter Ben Jcnkim in Gloho-` I'\._-..._. ` I . Raga he steamboat. \ The great rage for naming ntambonutur \ putty vronnu ugly men in-npidly ap- ui Glad, and man`: know at 1 boat on the Ohio or Iaixsippi, built in the past two yum, that but been named Altar K living mu.-a.n...1 1-5. mu-I.`u : nuhlighaa in tin II HEISCBTIIJ on society. sun: I II-vi I aivwv-I IIIJIIIUO `Die ngwest liquid pnlnteitickler that the Prince 0 Wnlee he learned to mix is neither ` a simple not I modest drink. Moreover, the avor to ourmind- (for we have tested It) doee not wu-rent the trouble or getting to- gether the ingredients and the (`are neces- for a successful hrew. The following ` ere eomeot the requirement: for the hlend~ in; of the tipple: Rye whisky, champagne, Inns:-hino. Angosture hitters, lemon peel. e pine or pineepple. povzdered sugar and ice. The chief charm to hip` who iinhibee snob" I mixtnn must be that he in indulging in what is neceqerily quite an exclusive drink.-llod- no-n nnintv uuwuens, ` an Inn; V Hohaa learned that natural conditions will not bend to aid poor or rich; that ingratltudo inaplantthatcan growlntho Ilumuaweu ason the avenue; that the confederation of forces, the conservation) of pon-en. the union 0! energy, skill and Intent:-u that that go by the name of cozporations, syndicates, com- paniegtruau andthalikoaro a layol the `civiaatlonot thotlmazho haalearned his lemon. but sweet. strong and hopi.-ful In him yet 8 '4tha|udoIqitah|ahaarto!Ar|nand Richelieu. "-8017 York Cor. Brooklyn Eagle. uvrv urn: uguuc nouung. ' He thought Pd show my teeth, but my speech was sustained Ids." chucklingly ex- plains the old Inn. The cuemaker was nowhao," he Iddl. * llnfhnn Innv-nod Qluo n-on-.1 ....;...I:s:-_- _.nI ` guawra," was we reply. It was Swinton who gravely proposed to discuss in Madison square garden with Wil- liam H. Vnmlerbilt the latter`: right to his millions to the sheer consternation of that man, and somewhat to his apprehension. It was Swiuton against whom Dept.-IV "braced himself" for the debate at the Nineteenth Century club, and it was Swinton who at x that club spoke only such houeyud words of the allowance: which ought to be made for rich men that De-pow`: prepared arguments were kick: against nothing. Ha thoncht. Pd llinw rnv Qnnfh hut rnw CANADIAN & AMERICAN COAL on. ""' """1Io1l\'ored in any nu-t the city. uu. Ul I I'M!` VII) . ` Yes, twice; once with Antonelli and once with Bismark, and both times in larger glanea," Wu the reply. It wnn Rwinlnn who an-grain nnnvvunnal on I IIUII VVIII [IUD CUIIKIIIIICNL Did you ever taste that Lind of wine bo- hefore. Snintouf asked A. 1`. Stewart of him L: a dinner once in the Thirty-fourth street palace, as the host duled out the least hit nf A I-nan 1-int-on nu cu. puuux, u tue in hit of a rare vinuge. "an tuinn- nnnn I win-u I WILIIFS on we ueecner Lnu. Musing on the innmu-," was the water that cuue quick as n ash. stnight as a rie bullnnd harduurock. Thntcrossen.mina- tion was not continued. A.l'\:.I .<.... ......_ n....A.. `I.-. I :__..| _n _x__- L- : Iiwn. unu (U0 l\l!`l| was I'll!-L I John .\`u-intun hit` in stop. He (`uuld starve his stomach and deny his mind as l- ng as he could got together enough to pay the printer. but when that fnilui he ceased. No one sul- fe-rexl hm but himself. Tim theories of tho man were visionary and destructive, but he was the safest conduit for them there was. He would denounce property without being nhle to remove the conviction of everybody that he was the kindest old man in the world. He would roar like Etna. but the birds would not y away when he walked by them. He would emit lire and daughter. but his wallet would he turned innideont to the llnthqgnr. He would ndrocnio communism and parties it by loading up guninn with pa-menu Now York knew him on n stngo quantity whoa heart was on gentle as summer. The amount of verbal vehelnenco that had Oohogoto ooundod In him like tho demons` Ionplno union; the mountain: or ucintillotod around nnd within him like the lightning of I July twilight; hutthenoiaowuonlynohonndtho lightning struck nothing but hh pocketbook. A nw PIRSOIAL AXICDOIII. The old man was ucomervntivo form-,n discounted thunderbolt, and did not nun to know it. Be cuno, Ill be thought. unto his own. and they noel:-ed him not. They unto whom hecontpenrlstumcd and rendodhim. He will nd harbor whence he went forth to nine norm and encounter shipwreck. What l'I\rn vnn dnina thnl Alta:-nnnn nn tun nunn Ina encouuwr InlpI|'l`ECl. What were you doing that afternoon on hnt corner! asked Mr. Rnllerton of him `when I witness on the Beecher trial. vllnnimu nu cl... :..n..u..-v..-- .1..- -......._ Ill, IIIVWVI [III ')II_"' Iii CIIIII--I IICTVGI I\H It. I do not dealre to gure aaa Tl`!-lawuy who would lift the ahroucl of a dead genius to ho able to u-ll the world which was the club foot that tho vaulty of thoaonot tho.-gods concealed in his llo tlme. Tho Rllin for in- dicating the aacriltm to which John Bwinton haa_nhJoctl hiuaarlt for an idcabthatan luataaca at eudunnco may he ahowu (mu whlch human uatun may draw alenou. \"ournadan know that the man`: paper h dead: thatltdiatllor want 0! support; that its death prona that lahor will aot labor to help it: champions-all thia la kaowa. IIOI Inna `I0 vovaan. Notknownara thcaa (acts: Thaold man hogan publhhlng that paper whoa ha llvad in a maniac roplota with tnaauna of art aatl litaraturo and with was which waalth ha: forallthq-want: and tho taata. A French chat miaistend to thupicaraan palataa which tho hoapitabln master invitnd around hlm. Stateamon. nlonnen. heautiaa. morali and at timoa the |l1nt1I of atatca and of churchaa wonahiagueata lot long months paat ho haa lived in oaqroum in a tanamont among the alums. his food not coating Ol a week and not worm but um little, aepleung himat-It ' in body that the paper might go on; earning Gilt) by a nuu:au'na article on something ha was imlxm-n-nt about that he might isua thought: which he was it:-meodouly moved about. "1 will dine you fora aixpouco, but if you want me to write for you my term: will ha 830 a column: it will bring out my next Linc. he would say. An inmme of over Slwnkla ymr and a fortune which at least ' ve tigun-s would he medal to expn-m. houar, {urnitun-. Imrsw. wines. clothes. last 1! an tho!-1-Inn-I l-nuke, have gone to austain an idea. and the idea was wm.L l._|... u....'...,... L- I ._ ,.___ ma, , ,,,u;_.,,,,,. 11nuu-hwrmnumuuohn Ilwiutoahnl not gvocutholmnolwhu and damn Ink. Agnatclnlotuynptty hhltln In York furthold unn.furbohu.IOII hnnthoonlylulu-nppsnnc hcoehunln -umncdmnsklnonrhon. B0 In roptr `an-anal enough unutuqoutbauhnd. ` uulemugh bunntmonthoothol-.00 auto or dnmr|u- I striking ponnullty-wI0o In In also uatbal a demand In: comedy as well u supplied an exunploul lntmmy. , There will haw to be I day of jndgmch to gunk Ilu-(her John Bwlntunk mu-nmnnhm In 1 Rd hot cuuvicuou or n tonuot cultivated ego- uun. which he htcomo a luck or n taut!- rlan. T nnmor ts. however. nut unimport- uuulbo ncuhuuhoolduun was at my time undy to die for lab tnd-ll death could ha Inic-tout In 1 propedy drumuo manner- und, mun`: tbs pity. bu almost nun-ad (or II, I An nnl Again: In mnu nun `I :-uh-nv buying llluuoll the iloouurlo-I ol Uh that III: Paper light 00 OI-Appu` only I strung: lodloy 0! (`entranc- Ilouonfon-nnl Auoodocos The Prince`: Rowen lzlppio. _,__... u_,_nu _.-n--, 1-:_Lu , .. Universal Stoves and Ranges, i A aouammsr wno dacnnruczo museu ron AN mu mom JOHN swI.\'ro.v. THE BRITISH wmu 1*uE$*DTu,sm'r.o. `any will) Wlll ,lll!Ill'ulIr( : on-not Bartlett`: dh(g:1lov- 2. 1 ocgmmvd by pqml_\`>i~'. him was Ilho to n\'o.-rx\`c:`L _ ;f 11011 of the In-;is!u:;;I\-. vruuI`nIrue(i V|Ill'lQ(I on luv .' ' 939`. hilt his. successor, I.E-'-x:r- - ex-nor Wum-nan, was chum: ow.- llcu tiekct,and was the m.'~~ puny who was ,mnx-usfurlrt gnmr llm-tlnnh AI-....).... 4 1 ~\'. Auv avcnn. Dlli "'K ten years after his arrival on the gold. Govxnsox: n.u.7u:n. ,en coast be abandoned jounmlism fa "ticht. Int Mn politics gmd , was` time same year oiecteq county clerk. He has our .~inco been in public me. having ll(`l1l'I`1t`(` con- tinuously. In 1889 he was chomn ll|."_\'1`l' at Sun I-`nncinco. |nd,'|t in Chm-l::u-i',~ case, the nnyonlty proud I stepping .~'nI!n~ Io lI|o_ 00 (I chic! nng_!It*|_te !`'L~' f-` :_2' ". ifewhd {Tm 3.`-` ~ :':fti0 Y 3..n9`. . I'..- Governor Waliillngton lXa*t|(-lt. Governor Washington Bartlett; of Califon nin, who may have joined the silent ma- jority before these words are read, was born in Georgia. and in 1840 went to Californil with the outfit. for a printing olnce. Shortly after his arrival in ..-- 9-.. I.\......:..__- L- /~_-_-.9~T_ `Il Uu vu Iiulvu III.` II !!! ruuug l0 LIPS LIIUIIICS, I00 state capital, broke down, he walked the six .1 miles remaining of the journey in order to keep an appointment. Govemor Lnrmbee is personally popular with his nc-iglibom and subordinates, and has always been :1 very sttong supporter of the common mhool ilhnn u may.-ruy ox noon: u.uuU. rvrsonzuly, u`ov- emor Lnnnbee is stable and nppmachablo and is plain in manner and drum On one occasion, when the engine dr:u\'iu'.' the train on which he was riding to Des .\I-ints. tho Itlf onnifnl IxnnLnnrn Inn II'`l'u4' Hug pic no In.-Iu [I NEED In that body for more than tm-my years. tftermud. He was t nonninnted to the governorship by Gov. WM. LARIIABE the Republicans in 1:`\\"'o. and Wu: elected by a majority of about 6.000. Pvrsonzxlly, Gov- ernnr Lnrmlw. ;. .4r..m. ....l ..............n..m. uucltalwl Ill SUV-3 railroad develop- ment of hismlophed state. He has been inberestexl in bank- lng since 1572. His 4 rst political office ` . same to him when he was elected to the state senate. He held a seat in blunt LAJ-. I... ..._..V 4 Governor Wllllnln Lnrnbee. Williannn Lnrrabee, pn-cent govembr (1 Iowa, and recently unanimously renmninntcd by the Republican: of the state. in a native at Connecticut. and was bom in 1%.: In 1853 he removed to Iowa and began his wesurn life as A farmer. Three yeun later. however. he went into milling and nnnufnctuhng, and` still later became . interested in thtg uUu.\IlI.| uun: uuule unn lull" Ill! LODSIIIE lion`: embnrrusmenu were overcome. and was delegate at large to the Democratic convention: of I83) and 183-1. Still 11% Prddent Chm.-land tendered Capt. Howell lb nnnninhnmt u nrlnnl hn llnm-in-no [ any-ucuu vuvv.-Iuuu wllltrll Lip`. 11017!!! the nppointlnmt as consul to Manchenh', England. but tip once was declined. `spur Ill Amu Capt Howell wu electtd Acute temtorfw O ucond time some time After The Consum- an`: lnhnrvnnnungnln -`- A---.4-... -_J UKIIII Kl. lllllll, OI ROW X0?` ur. Grnafy nnocined uixzisexr with tho ll} IUl' -ll(l|UCr. The house was duly mongaged and {I0 debt: paid. Capt. Howell and Mr. Hemphl now own over hull of the paper. The rest of theutock ildivided between Ilr. Grady and John H. lnnun, of New York. i ll n.~..I'u -.-...a-o..I |..'.......n -u\. .L- VII! ll'UlIl nor IIllll'r`llI`IIW. Do tn. was the rvply; but don`! come 0 me for another.` TL- |....._. ___ .|..|.- __,4,-_,u _, - .-, l'|Il"Il. The pn-u-mg .1.-bu 0! the paper were pdd, but for mine unw money around The Consti- tution nive I'll A wry neuron nrtirle. Capt. Hun-ell`: father, who was I leading jurist. of Georgia. [and mu mm In Atlanta newt- pnpern. but the pain deteruxinod to Apply to nun for nnsiuance. It was retuse~l.nnd Capt. Howell then said that be proposal to mortzngs his wife`: homo, which was I pru- u out from her fllhfl`-Ill-III. MIL. -.-. '` _... .n.,. _.-,I... -1 __. 1-... -,,,- A Hahn: on hnnd a large and well unsorted stocko! Lndien'.Genuemen`n and Bo~o`Boots of all vu-ieuel also Trunks. Vnliaeo. c. I inmnd mnkimr Custom `Va:-k nnnscinllv no u-svuuly Uuuwun a small river. W_}noa about half way acrnll. a I03, `III II rnmkul llluh} Ihlvh n-Inu- bind a lxumanarm. altaclu-ml tn It, caught the` vnplaln around um neck. Ho can near lua- . lnghinneru-Jurho an;-pour-I In area \. clutch:-I In up ohomo gust tux r. uowxu. odonl. Tho hauler be struggled to (no lslma-all the stronger tho In; M on to lulu. Finally ha hcoalno exhausted. uald hh prayer-I propan- Iory In du-alh,an-I can hlnnel! up to Ihlo unknown and nlontlau toe. Than he led mnncluunne-. When he ncovoml hlnul! ho was lying on the river bank. when ho haul drift:-I, Irlth the log alongitla of him. At the clan of the war Capt. Howell. who Ina then 23 yeara of age, began to study law. No com- bine-cl pnlltica with his 5-ml:-nluu. and hold thoom of al-knnan In Atlanta. Then he lnecame city alitnr of The Atlanta Intelli- gencer. but llnally went back to law, and ho vamo wlmluw gs-um-al 0! In: elm-uit. llo Iran alnoelecu-dwlho I-tat uenam. In D76 ho was a la-la-gate to the St. louis Democratic convention, an-I when he retunml home he ones mom gave up the law and bought an in- terest In The Atlanta (`onsu!uu'on, I Inch val then eight ya-an --2-I. It had bun founded in l.`il8 by Can-y \\'. Style-a, who Is known ln Georgia as [be nun: who has canal mom papers and made I-ss nu-my out 0! them than any uthcr man in the sum. The Con- stitution has thrn uwned by E Y. Clarla and N. P. '1`. Fmch, ila editors. and \l', A Hemplnill, its I-uslm-nl manager. Capt. How- ell bought out (`mrke and surtul upon lba tlllllcull task of nxnknng a sucn-sful daily `paper. He was aulul ly Hemphnll and I-`mu-h. wuuuuuugupuvulun Irina lmnl unnu- hr. W. \'n.. Go (.`unhoI-Ind. lat. which in In oxuunoly Ilnruus I.ndaI1aIlI. Antwan] Inc vs phat! In chop ol I hungry undu (kn Wake. uad given the nut of captain. llohd amriounpodnaauudork nub! wufoctllt an smut lnIho\`lr;tuhnmn- L I --V I--uni -Gus-uruvr wlil UK I` Atlanta Constitution. Inn P. Hows". the ebb! ctmnr and pund- pnl owntr at The Atlanta Cuasutuuou. In not to roll known as Henry W. Grady. whmo lunch Iperh at New York Inn winter [no N: 1 continua nu. npahuon. cup; lloioll Inn gruluud hon an (laugh nmuryumdonsyjuslnmtuho ogpuln` 9; shown. ljcjunod the umunrn u-uyud Ihuuuhhoul ht-nnllltitlayuucadully nuduollu I povulou u-Ila lmm V\'lm|- hi`. I . VA, on (`nah-h-4| Ila -Ll_L "no nugm uunpnm who odnu .-5. Album t`-nnnun.-, CM"| . EVAN P. HOWELL _...-i_4-. u u-u III`lIl$II|'u. point. He loud lunannrytouuin am-ll -4-.- The atock in wll sol edjnd consists of Velvet Pile, klllll, Tapestry. \\'o `Unions and Hempa. I ` ` --CHCICE I`A'ITl-IRNS AN D I.0\\` PRl(.'};8.---_- .- Borden to match Bmuglu and Tapestry Carpetu.~ Callind examine our Iiocln. A. J. ncumin, 5 CABPETS I oA:Ea1=>ETTr 0! III VII'lUI.lX C HIUU ITIIIIKB. V IllQ ac. having urvtcuol but men. NEWFALL G-OODSV ___.AT__ Momo/V7.9 /90/>1/L4/9 My 4 00003 /muss. `Fri: 12 Black Satin Mcrvcilleux me. cheap at $111). Black Satin .\lcr\'eilleux me. cheap at 81.10 Black Satin Mcrveilleux SLIIL cheap at $1.25. Black Satin Mervellleux $1.35. cheap at 81.75. Black Satin Mer\'eilleux 81.50. worth 31%. Job Line of Colo Satin: at ale. cheap at 75c. Black Grog Grain Silks 50c, worth w. Black GI-on Grain Silks worth 75. Black Tricntinen from we to $1.25. extra value. Black Watered Silk: 82.75. 82. and 89.75 per yard. Black V\'Atered Sllh 81.50. 81.75 and 82.13 per yard. Black Shulder Capes from 83 to $9 pg.-r pair Blnck Silk Hose from 50c to 81(1) per pair. Black and Colored Silk Gloves CHEAP AT THE CHEAPSIDE, SILKS oHmm.~sILK VBOWES & BISOEETCIEE lmlunt Tailoring and Gonts'l-`nrnlnhings, - Wellington St 1 doorman Princess St. N.B.-Sole Agent for Knight of Lshor Emble Sweeping Reductions in Balance of Spring & Summer Stoe< C. ROBINSONS \JlN)Ill.l.Il Ill OIIICT (IUPIITIHCIIII IITIV Ulllyo _ H'An inspection and comparison of irnrfcea invited. I `Lue of D. 1". Armstronxl. begs to infonn his friends at he has opened :1 Boot and shoe Store 0 PRINCESS STREET,-

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